Commit 649f5adb authored by Tatsuhiro Tsujikawa's avatar Tatsuhiro Tsujikawa

Update README.rst

parent b1905c58
......@@ -319,8 +319,8 @@ HTTP-draft-07/2.0, SPDY and HTTP/1.1. It has several operation modes:
Mode option Frontend Backend Note
================== ============================== ============== =============
default mode HTTP/2.0, SPDY, HTTP/1.1 (TLS) HTTP/1.1 Reverse proxy
``--spdy`` HTTP/2.0, SPDY, HTTP/1.1 (TLS) HTTP/1.1 SPDY proxy
``--spdy-bridge`` HTTP/2.0, SPDY, HTTP/1.1 (TLS) HTTP/2.0 (TLS)
``--http2-proxy`` HTTP/2.0, SPDY, HTTP/1.1 (TLS) HTTP/1.1 SPDY proxy
``--http2-bridge`` HTTP/2.0, SPDY, HTTP/1.1 (TLS) HTTP/2.0 (TLS)
``--client`` HTTP/2.0, HTTP/1.1 HTTP/2.0 (TLS)
``--client-proxy`` HTTP/2.0, HTTP/1.1 HTTP/2.0 (TLS) Forward proxy
================== ============================== ============== =============
......@@ -329,32 +329,28 @@ The interesting mode at the moment is the default mode. It works like
a reverse proxy and listens HTTP-draft-07/2.0, SPDY and HTTP/1.1 and
can be deployed SSL/TLS terminator for existing web server.
The default mode, ``--spdy`` and ``--spdy-bridge`` modes use SSL/TLS
in the frontend connection by default. To disable SSL/TLS, use
The default mode, ``--http2-proxy`` and ``--http2-bridge`` modes use
SSL/TLS in the frontend connection by default. To disable SSL/TLS, use
``--frontend-no-tls`` option. If that option is used, SPDY is disabled
in the frontend and incoming HTTP/1.1 connection can be upgraded to
HTTP/2.0 through HTTP Upgrade.
The ``--spdy-bridge``, ``--client`` and ``--client-proxy`` modes use
The ``--http2-bridge``, ``--client`` and ``--client-proxy`` modes use
SSL/TLS in the backend connection by deafult. To disable SSL/TLS, use
``--backend-no-tls`` option.
The ``nghttpx`` supports configuration file. See ``--conf`` option and
sample configuration file ``nghttpx.conf.sample``.
The ``nghttpx`` is ported from ``shrpx`` in spdylay project, and it
still has SPDY color in option names. They will be fixed as the
development goes.
In the default mode, (without any of ``--spdy``, ``--spdy-bridge``,
``--client-proxy`` and ``--client`` options), ``nghttpx`` works as
reverse proxy to the backend server::
In the default mode, (without any of ``--http2-proxy``,
``--http2-bridge``, ``--client-proxy`` and ``--client`` options),
``nghttpx`` works as reverse proxy to the backend server::
Client <-- (HTTP/2.0, SPDY, HTTP/1.1) --> nghttpx <-- (HTTP/1.1) --> Web Server
[reverse proxy]
With ``--spdy`` option, it works as so called secure proxy (aka SPDY
proxy)::
With ``--http2-proxy`` option, it works as so called secure proxy (aka
SPDY proxy)::
Client <-- (HTTP/2.0, SPDY, HTTP/1.1) --> nghttpx <-- (HTTP/1.1) --> Proxy
[secure proxy] (e.g., Squid)
......@@ -378,7 +374,7 @@ Then run chrome with the following arguments::
$ google-chrome --proxy-pac-url=file:///path/to/proxy.pac --use-npn
With ``--spdy-bridge``, it accepts HTTP/2.0, SPDY and HTTP/1.1
With ``--http2-bridge``, it accepts HTTP/2.0, SPDY and HTTP/1.1
connections and communicates with backend in HTTP/2.0::
Client <-- (HTTP/2.0, SPDY, HTTP/1.1) --> nghttpx <-- (HTTP/2.0) --> Web or HTTP/2.0 Proxy etc
......@@ -408,7 +404,7 @@ For the operation modes which talk to the backend in HTTP/2.0 over
SSL/TLS, the backend connections can be tunneled though HTTP
proxy. The proxy is specified using ``--backend-http-proxy-uri``
option. The following figure illustrates the example of
``--spdy-bridge`` and ``--backend-http-proxy-uri`` option to talk to
``--http2-bridge`` and ``--backend-http-proxy-uri`` option to talk to
the outside HTTP/2.0 proxy through HTTP proxy::
Client <-- (HTTP/2.0, SPDY, HTTP/1.1) --> nghttpx <-- (HTTP/2.0) --
......
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